Bui C, Rahman B, Heywood A E, MacIntyre C R
School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Transbound Emerg Dis. 2017 Jun;64(3):967-977. doi: 10.1111/tbed.12466. Epub 2016 Jan 10.
Despite a much higher rate of human influenza A (H7N9) infection compared to influenza A (H5N1), and the assumption that birds are the source of human infection, detection rates of H7N9 in birds are lower than those of H5N1. This raises a question about the role of birds in the spread and transmission of H7N9 to humans. We conducted a meta-analysis of overall prevalence of H5N1 and H7N9 in different bird populations (domestic poultry, wild birds) and different environments (live bird markets, commercial poultry farms, wild habitats). The electronic database, Scopus, was searched for published papers, and Google was searched for country surveillance reports. A random effect meta-analysis model was used to produce pooled estimates of the prevalence of H5N1 and H7N9 for various subcategories. A random effects logistic regression model was used to compare prevalence rates between H5N1 and H7N9. Both viruses have low prevalence across all bird populations. Significant differences in prevalence rates were observed in domestic birds, farm settings, for pathogen and antibody testing, and during routine surveillance. Random effects logistic regression analyses show that among domestic birds, the prevalence of H5N1 is 47.48 (95% CI: 17.15-133.13, P < 0.001) times higher than H7N9. In routine surveillance (where surveillance was not conducted in response to human infections or bird outbreaks), the prevalence of H5N1 is still higher than H7N9 with an OR of 43.02 (95% CI: 16.60-111.53, P < 0.001). H7N9 in humans has occurred at a rate approximately four times higher than H5N1, and for both infections, birds are postulated to be the source. Much lower rates of H7N9 in birds compared to H5N1 raise doubts about birds as the sole source of high rates of human H7N9 infection. Other sources of transmission of H7N9 need to be considered and explored.
尽管甲型流感病毒H7N9的人类感染率比甲型流感病毒H5N1高得多,且假定鸟类是人类感染源,但H7N9在鸟类中的检出率低于H5N1。这就引发了一个关于鸟类在H7N9传播给人类过程中所起作用的问题。我们对H5N1和H7N9在不同鸟类种群(家禽、野生鸟类)和不同环境(活禽市场、商业家禽养殖场、野生栖息地)中的总体流行情况进行了荟萃分析。通过搜索电子数据库Scopus查找已发表论文,并通过谷歌搜索各国监测报告。采用随机效应荟萃分析模型对H5N1和H7N9在各个子类别的流行率进行汇总估计。采用随机效应逻辑回归模型比较H5N1和H7N9的流行率。两种病毒在所有鸟类种群中的流行率都很低。在家禽、养殖场环境、病原体和抗体检测以及常规监测中,观察到了流行率的显著差异。随机效应逻辑回归分析表明,在家禽中,H5N1的流行率比H7N9高47.48倍(95%置信区间:17.15 - 133.13,P < 0.001)。在常规监测中(即并非针对人类感染或鸟类疫情进行的监测),H5N1的流行率仍然高于H7N9,优势比为43.02(95%置信区间:16.60 - 111.53,P < 0.001)。H7N9在人类中的出现率约为H5N1的四倍,并且对于这两种感染,都假定鸟类是感染源。与H5N1相比,H7N9在鸟类中的发生率要低得多,这让人怀疑鸟类是否是人类H7N9高感染率的唯一来源。需要考虑和探索H7N9的其他传播来源。